Adresse professionnelle
UMR 7041 – ArScAn – Archéologies Environnementales,
Maison de l’Archéologie et de l’Ethnologie
21, allée de l’Université
F-92023 NANTERRE Cedex
2016 (Janvier-mai) Washington University in St. Louis responsable de cours “Culture and Environment” (35h de CM).
2013 (Juin-juillet) Washington University in St. Louis responsable de cours “Introduction to Archaeology” (35h de CM).
2009-2016 Washington University in St. Louis assistante (type ATER, 10 cours différents).
2008 Yale University assistante (type ATER) “Hoaxes and Fantasies in Archaeology”.
Responsabilités scientifiques et administratives
Responsabilités diverses
Archéobotaniste responsable de projets El Peru-Waka’ (Guatemala, dir. David Freidel, Washington University in St. Louis), La Corona (Guatemala, dir. Marcello Canuto, Tulane University), et Teotihuacan (Mexique, Saburo Sugiyama, Aichi Prefectural University; Nawa Sugiyama, George Mason University; David Carballo, Boston University).
Participante au projet ANR CAMÉLANDES (Dir. Nicolas Goepfert CNRS-Université de Paris 1, UMR 8096)
Bibliographie
Articles dans des revues internationales à comité de lecture
2019 Clarissa Cagnato Prehistoric and Traditional Agriculture in Lowland Mesoamerica. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Environmental Science. DOI: 10.1093/acrefore/9780199389414.013.174
2018 Clarissa Cagnato.
Shedding light on the nightshades (Solanaceae) used by the ancient Maya: A review of existing data, and new archaeobotanical (macro- and microbotanical) evidence from archaeological sites in Guatemala (Economic Botany).
2017 Clarissa Cagnato et Jocelyne M. Ponce.
Ancient Maya Manioc (Manihot esculenta Crantz) Consumption: Starch Grain Evidence from Late to Terminal Classic (8th-9th century A.D.) Occupation at La Corona, Northwestern Petén, Guatemala. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 16:276-286.
2017 Clarissa Cagnato.
Sweet, Weedy, and Wild: Macrobotanical Remains from a Late Classic (8th century A.D.) Feasting Deposit Discovered at La Corona, an Ancient Maya Settlement. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany pp. 1-12.
2017 Clarissa Cagnato.
Underground pits (Chultunes) in the Southern Maya Lowlands: Excavation Results
from Classic Maya Sites in Northwestern Petén, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica
28(1): 75-94.
2015 Clarissa Cagnato, Gayle J. Fritz, et Shannon L. Dawdy.
Strolling through Madame Mandeville’s Garden: The Real and Imagined Landscape of Eighteenth Century New Orleans, Louisiana. Journal of Ethnobiology 35(2): 235-261.
Critique littéraire
2016 Clarissa Cagnato.
Forest of the Lacandon Maya: An Ethnobotanical Guide, par Suzanne Cook, 2016. Economic Botany 70(3):343-344.
Clarissa CAGNATO
Statut chercheur associée
UMR 7041 – ArScAn – Archéologies Environnementales,
Maison de l’Archéologie et de l’Ethnologie
21, allée de l’Université
F-92023 NANTERRE Cedex
ccagnato …at… wustl.edu
Domaines de recherche
Intitulé de la thèse
A Paleoethnobotanical Study of Two Classic Maya Sites, El Perú-Waka’ and La Corona
Domaines géographiques
Domaines thématiques
Biographie
Formation et distinctions
Emplois et enseignement
Emplois
Enseignement
Responsabilités scientifiques et administratives
Responsabilités diverses
Bibliographie
Articles dans des revues internationales à comité de lecture
Shedding light on the nightshades (Solanaceae) used by the ancient Maya: A review of existing data, and new archaeobotanical (macro- and microbotanical) evidence from archaeological sites in Guatemala (Economic Botany).
Ancient Maya Manioc (Manihot esculenta Crantz) Consumption: Starch Grain Evidence from Late to Terminal Classic (8th-9th century A.D.) Occupation at La Corona, Northwestern Petén, Guatemala. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 16:276-286.
Sweet, Weedy, and Wild: Macrobotanical Remains from a Late Classic (8th century A.D.) Feasting Deposit Discovered at La Corona, an Ancient Maya Settlement. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany pp. 1-12.
Underground pits (Chultunes) in the Southern Maya Lowlands: Excavation Results
from Classic Maya Sites in Northwestern Petén, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica
28(1): 75-94.
Strolling through Madame Mandeville’s Garden: The Real and Imagined Landscape of Eighteenth Century New Orleans, Louisiana. Journal of Ethnobiology 35(2): 235-261.
Critique littéraire
Forest of the Lacandon Maya: An Ethnobotanical Guide, par Suzanne Cook, 2016. Economic Botany 70(3):343-344.
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